Boston Blue: Here's why you'll absolutely love Gloria Reuben's new role in the Blue Bloods spin-off

Gloria Reuben
Gloria Reuben (Image via Getty)

Gloria Reuben is taking on a standout role in the new Blue Bloods spin-off, Boston Blue.

She plays Mae Silver, Boston’s District Attorney, who also happens to be the head of a big, blended family full of cops. Mae has been through a lot. After her husband, a judge, was killed outside the courthouse, she has carried both her family and her career on her shoulders.

For Reuben, this part dives deep. It pulls her into the world of legal drama, family struggle, and the messiness that comes with both. It’s a new chapter for her after her memorable run on ER.

Meanwhile, Boston Blue takes the world of Blue Bloods and plants it right in the heart of Boston, swapping out New York’s streets for the city’s gritty neighborhoods. Mae Silver is at the core, juggling her family and her career, but there is a twist: Donnie Wahlberg is back as Detective Danny Reagan.

This time, Danny packs up and heads north, joining the Boston PD and teaming up with Lena Silver, Mae’s daughter. Lena isn’t just riding her mom’s coattails; she is already turning heads in the department. The show explores messy cases or the complicated family ties that come with working so closely together. You get the same blend of police action and family drama as the original, but with a fresh Boston spin that keeps everything feeling familiar, yet new.


Here’s why you will love Gloria Reuben’s new role in Boston Blue

Gloria Reuben (Image via Getty)
Gloria Reuben (Image via Getty)

As cited by Variety, Gloria Reuben’s character description reads:

“The widow of a judge who was murdered on the courthouse steps, Mae is the matriarch of a blended family of law enforcement professionals: her daughter Lena (Sonequa Martin-Green) is a Boston Police Department detective, and her stepdaughter Sarah (Maggie Lawson) is the police superintendent. Her son Jonah is a rookie cop. Mae is accustomed to making decisions and standing by them.”

Reuben’s experience really pays off here. She makes Mae feel like a real person: someone who has used to hard choices, who doesn’t back down, whether she is in court or trying to hold her family together over dinner.

The Silver family itself is a whole world. Lena, Mae’s daughter, works as a detective. Sarah, her stepdaughter, runs things as a police superintendent. Jonah, her son, just started as a rookie cop. All their jobs get tangled up with family: loyalties clash, arguments break out, but there is real care underneath it all.

Most people remember Gloria Reuben as Jeanie Boulet, the HIV-positive physician assistant on ER. Her role landed her two Emmy nods and a Golden Globe nomination. It really put her on the map on TV. After ER, she popped up as Krista Gordon, the therapist in Mr. Robot, which a lot of people loved. She has also been in a bunch of other shows: Raising The Bar, Falling Skies, Marvel’s Cloak & Dagger, City On A Hill, and The First Lady.


What is Boston Blue about?

Boston Blue (Image via CBS)
Boston Blue (Image via CBS)

Boston Blue drops the world of Blue Bloods right into Boston and gives it new life. There is a whole new cast, fresh problems, and a city that has its own attitude. At the center of it all is the Silver family. They are wrapped up in law enforcement from every angle, and you see how duty, loyalty, and justice pull them in every direction.

Mae Silver is the one holding the whole thing together. She is Boston’s District Attorney, but she is just as much the glue for her family. She is in the courtroom by day, then goes home to the chaos, comfort, and mess that comes with family. You see Mae constantly balancing her job as DA with being a mom and a leader, and you can tell how much it costs her every time she has to choose.

Boston Blue successfully mixes the excitement of crime investigations and daily family life in its rawest and unedited form. The cast includes actors such as Donnie Wahlberg playing Danny Reagan and Sonequa Martin-Green playing Lena Silver, both of whom are adding not only their own light but also their own difficulties. The relations among these three are a strong point of the narrative. These are not just fellow cops combating the criminals, but a family.

Boston Blue digs into what justice and family mean, what loyalty demands, and how much you have to give up for both. The tension isn’t just out on the street; it is right there at the dinner table. That is what makes it worth watching, whether you loved the original or you are just discovering it now.

Edited by Sahiba Tahleel